Łukašenka fears his exiled opponents may storm into Belarus

September 26, Pozirk. Alaksandar Łukašenka turned his fire on his political opponents during his conference with officials in Minsk on September 26.
He claimed that his exiled opponents are planning “to storm into territory [Belarus] as Ukrainians did it in the Kursk province, occupy part of the territory and destabilize the situation in the country.”
“This is a last resort for them, because no one gives money for empty talk,” he said at a government meeting on HR matters.
Łukašenka claimed that his exiled opponents “engage in empty talk completely losing the international and internal agendas to Belarusian journalists.”
According to him, their US sponsors understand it and “start demanding a more resolute action in return for funding.”
That is why, he said, he has to “pay much attention to defense.”
He reiterated that next year’s presidential poll will be a major test. “An electoral campaign is always a front, always a battlefield,” he stressed, warning the officials against relaxing.
At least 500,000 Belarusians fled their country fearing political reprisals in the period from the August 2020 presidential election to January 2024, said social scientist Hiennadź Koršunaŭa in May.
Koršunaŭ studied available data from countries that shelter Belarusians. After 2020 about 120,000 Belarusian nationals settled down in Poland, 50,000 in Lithuania, 8,000 in Germany and 25,000 in other EU countries. In addition, 11,000 Belarusians moved to Georgia and 5,000 to Israel.
The scientist noted that Russia was probably the main destination but it was “almost impossible” to determine the number of people who have gone to Russia.
Also read: About 500,000-600,000 have left Belarus after 2020 election – sociologist
- PoliticsPolitically-motivated reprisals reported on April 16, 17The material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsŁukašenka: I am not West’s son of a bitchThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics
- PoliticsInterior ministry brands 21 people as “extremists”The material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy, SocietyLithuania intercepts 12 cigarette-smuggling drones from Belarus since JanuaryThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Economy
- Politics
- Politics, SocietyIrregular Belarus-EU crossings hit new daily high for 2026 on April 16The material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyBelarus’ GDP contraction slows to 0.4 percent in Q1The material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsŁukašenka seeks “mutually beneficial projects” with SyriaThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EU says Minsk violates academic freedoms by blacklisting exiled universityThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsOfficial: 2,354 propaganda workers employed in MinskThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics, SecurityRussia-led military bloc plans two exercises in Belarus this yearThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- Politics
- SocietyEnvironment ministry announces aerial rabies vaccination of wild animalsThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- SocietyCustoms officers seize over 2 kg of psychotropic drugs from bus at Brest checkpointThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyCentral bank’s net foreign currency assets down 7.7 percent in MarchThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyBiełstat: industrial inventories up nearly 10 percent in Q1The material is available only to POZIRK+
- PoliticsRyžankoŭ to attend meeting of CIS foreign ministers in MoscowThe material is available only to POZIRK+
- EconomyIndustrial production down 3.4 percent in January-MarchThe material is available only to POZIRK+



